In response to communication from CAMERA and its new Arabic department, the Huffington Post removes clips lifted from Hamas' Shehab News Agency, including a caption which refers to Israel as "the enemy" and "the occupation."

CAMERA again prompts correction of an AFP article which incorrectly stated that the Entebbe hijackers singled out Israelis, keeping them hostage. In fact, the Palestinian and German terrorists singled out Jews, both Israelis and non-Israelis.

In his 2016 film Occupation of the American Mind, Sut Jhally, PhD., violated the trust of his audience, his students and his fellow professors at UMass Amherst, where ironically enough, he is a Communications professor.

For the second time, CAMERA prompts correction of a Times of Israel story which incorrectly reported that the longstanding American position was that Israeli settlements are illegal under international law.

In remarks that were uncritically disseminated by several news outlets, former President Obama defended his decision not to veto United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334 on the grounds that settlements were rapidly expanding. Yet, the truth is otherwise, as CAMERA noted in The Daily Caller.

Following Haaretz's correction, The Jerusalem Post also corrects a headline which falsely alleged that Israel is handing out cash prizes to civilians who deport African asylum seekers. The real story is that the Population and Immigration Authority is hiring.

Apparently, NPR thinks a nearly ten-year-old phone conversation in which the Israeli prime minister's wife lost her temper is more newsworthy than extreme and hateful pronouncements by the head of the Palestinian Authority.

The headline and text of an Haaretz analysis by Odeh Bisharat falsely charge that the Knesset was emptied of Arabs during VP Pence's speech. And, like that, Haaretz erased the presence of Israeli Arab MKs Issawi Frej (above) and Zouhrair Bahloul.

CAMERA prompts improved language in a Times of Israel article which was unclear about the number of living Palestinian refugees. The Times of Israel adds that the figure is in the low tens of thousands.

CAMERA prompts correction of a United Press International article which incorrectly stated that the future American embassy in Jerusalem will be the first foreign embassy in the city. In fact, there have been over a dozen, with the last two closing in 2006.

Not long after they ignored anti-Semitic rhetoric by Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, the media got a second chance. Another speech, with more outlandish vitriol, followed. Did they seize the opportunity?

CNN made a mistake when it reached out to former Latin Patriarch Michel Sabbah for commentary about Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital. Sabbah is an inveterate propagandist who has misled people for years.

The New York Times was wrong to claim an Egyptian intelligence officer urged the media not to condemn U.S. recognition of Israel's capital. It was wrong to suddenly change its characterization of Ramallah from a lively city to a dreary town. And it was wrong to ignore anti-Semitism by Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas.

National Geographic's lengthy interview with novelist Nicholas Blincoe, was edited for length and clarity, but not accuracy. Among Blincoe's are the false claim that Bethlehem is a main source of water for Israel, that no tourists visited for a decade, and that Israel wiped out Palestinian cities.

For the second time, CAMERA prompts correction of Haaretz English edition coverage of Ibrahim Abu Thuraya. While an Amira Hass Op-Ed in English misled about how the double amputee lost his legs, the same Op-Ed in Hebrew did not.

While the media fixates on embassy locations, it routinely ignores the long history of Arab rejectionism of a Jewish state in the Jewish people's ancestral homeland, CAMERA notes in The Washington Jewish Week.

In her Los Angeles Times article about a Strategic Affairs Ministry list of 20 pro-BDS organizations whose key activists will be denied entry into Israel,Noga Tarnopolsky errs regarding international and Israeli law, including the entry law in question.

"What is Unrwa?" asks The Times profile which obscures more than its enlightens about the U.N. agency tasked with caring for Palestinian refugees. Its disproportionate staff size, its unique definition for refugee, its political activism, its teachers' antisemitism and incitement are just some of the ignored issues.

CAMERA prompts corrections at AP, DPA and Haaretz's English edition, where captions stated as fact that Israel was responsible for Ibrahim Abu Thuraya's death, despite unclear circumstances. The captions also wrongly said he lost his legs in an Israeli bombing.

The President of the Palestinian Authority (PA), Mahmoud Abbas, gives a deeply anti-Semitic speech before an audience of terror financiers and war criminals. The media, amid filing dozens of reports on the future of the "peace process," chooses to ignore it. Or worse still, they selectively edit his remarks.

CAMERA prompts correction of a Israel Hayom article which falsely stated that Israeli journalist Ben Caspit called for retaliation against the Tamimi family, after cousins Ahed and Nour were recently filmed repeatedly striking an Israeli soldier.

CAMERA prompts correction of a New York Times article which identified Lebanon as the possible "one exception" in a region intolerant towards its gay, lesbian and transgender citizens. The article had completely overlooked Israel, the Middle Eastern country with the best GLBT record by far.

The outcome of the General Assembly vote about Jerusalem was predictable, if not surprisingly lacking the number of supporters pro-Palestinian votes tend to attract. But to the New York Times, it was astounding.

CAMERA today prompts correction of an Haaretz article wrongly identified the Western Wall as "Judaism's holiest site." (That distinction belongs to the Temple Mount.) Another "Haaretz, Lost in Translation," the error had appeared only in the paper's English edition.

C-SPAN public service network routinely airs anti-Jewish, anti-Israel defamation in its three-hour daily call-in show and in certain other programs. Its 2018 resolutions should include a commitment to remedying this problem.

After the newspaper pointed out, in favor of its arguments, that "East Jerusalem was exclusively Arab in 1967," CAMERA's letter set the record straight about how briefly, and why, the area was empty of Jews.

CAMERA prompts correction of an NPR article which erroneously stated that UN Resolution 242 calls for an Israeli withdrawal from eastern Jerusalem. In fact, the resolution doesn't mention Jerusalem, and does not specify from which and how much territory Israel must withdraw.

In response to communication from CAMERA, AP amends an article which had noted that 2014 Hamas tunnel attacks surprised Israel and terrified residents, but which had failed to mention that the infiltrators also killed five soldiers.

CAMERA prompts a Newsweek correction of the absurd claim that the West Bank village of Susiya "has been in Palestinian control since the 1830s." Newsweek has yet to correct its erroneous depiction of the Israel Anti-Boycott Act.

Updated: For the second time in four months, CAMERA intercedes and The New York Times deletes a blatantly antisemitic comment which appeared as a "Times Pick." Last week, a comment about "super-rich individuals of Jewish descent who buy our politicians" received the coveted Times designation.

The New York Times engaged in historical revisionism about Jerusalem with the publication of a lengthy background essay that minimizes historic Jewish ties to the city and is filled with erroneous assertions, misleading quotes and belittling aspersions about Jewish belief.